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You searched for: subject:"Where -- Florida"
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[movies]Discovery's Final Flight Ends Safely at Kennedy
Space shuttle Discovery concludes its final mission with a safe landing at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
[image]Aeroelastic Fixed Wing Micro Air Vehicle - NASA/Langley Research Center (NASA-LaRC)
Wind tunnel testing of the University of Florida Aeroelastic Fixed Wing Micro Air Vehicle, biologically inspired flight systems. Photographed in building 1214, Basic Aerodynamics Research Tunnel (BART).
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 9
[image]Tropical Storm Irene - Provided by the SeaWiFS Project, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
SeaWiFS captured this view of Tropical Storm Irene as it churns between Florida and the Yucatan. Sensor: OrbView-2/SeaWiFS. Data Start Date: 10/13/99.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 5
[image]Florida Fires, April 1999 - Image courtesy Norman Kuring and Gene Feldman, SeaWiFS project
Florida is experiencing another series of fires this spring, the result of months of low rainfall. This Sea-viewing Wide Field of View Sensor (SeaWiFS) image, taken on April 19, 1999, shows two smoke plumes in the north of the state, and a dense, low pall of smoke over the Everglades to the south. The Everglades fire burned for the better part of a week, closing Interstate 75 and threatening several Indian reservations...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Florida Fires, April 1999 - Image courtesy Norman Kuring and Gene Feldman, SeaWiFS project
Florida is experiencing another series of fires this spring, the result of months of low rainfall. This Sea-viewing Wide Field of View Sensor (SeaWiFS) image, taken on April 19, 1999, shows two smoke plumes in the north of the state, and a dense, low pall of smoke over the Everglades to the south. The Everglades fire burned for the better part of a week, closing Interstate 75 and threatening several Indian reservations.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]SeaWiFS: West Florida Shelf Turbidity - Provided by the SeaWiFS Project, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
The turbidity of the water over the West Florida Shelf has increased markedly over the past few days as can be seen in this series of SeaWiFS images. It is possible that this may be caused, at least in part, by increased river discharge after the recent heavy precipitation in parts of the southeastern U.S.The long narrow cloud that passes just south of Lake George in the December 17 image appears to be a smoke plume...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Florida Everglades - Image provided by the Satellite Systems Branch
Spanning the southern tip of the Florida Peninsula and most of Florida Bay, Everglades National Park is the only subtropical preserve in North America. It contains both temperate and tropical plant communities, including sawgrass prairie, mangrove and cypress swamps, pinelands, and hardwood hammocks, as well as marine and estuarine environments. The park is known for its rich bird life, particularly large wading birds, such as the roseate spoonbill, wood stork, great blue heron, and a variety of...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 8
[image]Hurricane Ophelia - NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, at NASA GSFC.
Tropical Storm Ophelia gathered strength and size off the Atlantic Coast of Florida for several days. During this time, it brought winds and rain over a growing area including the Florida coast, though the storm’s center remained offshore. By September 8, it briefly reached hurricane strength, though this status lasted only a few hours before the storm lost some intensity and was again classified as a tropical storm...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
This image of black water off the coast of Florida was acquired on January 9, 2002, by the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS). Scientists and local fishermen are not sure what is coloring this typically turquoise water black. Amid growing concern, scientists are now trying to determine the source of the black water. Sensor: OrbView-2/SeaWiFS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image by Jesse Allen, Robert Simmon, and the
This image from the Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) shows black water off the coast of Florida on January 30, 2002. In late March 2002 a diver investigating the water discovered dead and dying sponges and coral?an indication that the discoloration may be the result of a toxic phytoplankton bloom, which sometimes kill sponges before other marine species. Sensor: Terra/MODIS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
This image of black water off the coast of Florida was acquired on February 18, 2002, by the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS). Scientists and local fishermen are not sure what is coloring this typically turquoise water black. Amid growing concern, scientists are now trying to determine the source of the black water.For up-to-date images of the area, view these SeaWiFS Images of Sensor: OrbView-2/SeaWiFS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image by Jesse Allen, Robert Simmon, and the
By March 10, the mysterious black water off the west coast of Florida had started to disperse and drift toward the Florida Keys. Although no one yet knows what caused the discoloration, divers in the area have found dead sponges and coral, which is indicative of an algae bloom. Sensor: Terra/MODIS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 4
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
This image of black water off the coast of Florida was acquired on March 20, 2002, by the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS). Scientists and local fishermen are not sure what is coloring this typically turquoise water black. Amid growing concern, scientists are now trying to determine the source of the black water.For up-to-date images of the area, view these SeaWiFS Images of Sensor: OrbView-2/SeaWiFS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Tropical Storm Cristobal - This visualization was producted by the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
The above image is from an (4.1 MB MPEG) that displays the rainfall rates within the Tropical Storm Cristobal on August 7, 2002, as it passed just to the east of St. Augustine, Florida. Yellow represents 0.5 to 1 inches of rain, green represents 1 to 2 inches of rain, and red represents rainfall levels of 2 inches and up. The rainfall data were obtained by the Precipitation Radar aboard NASA?s satellite...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy Liam Gumley, , University of Wisconsin-Madison
Over the past few weeks, another mass of black water appears to have formed off the Gulf Coast of Florida near Sanibel Island. This false-color image acquired on August 14, 2002, by the (MODIS) aboard NASA?s spacecraft shows the location of the black water. In the image, Sanibel is the hook-shaped Island on the western coast of Florida at the midway point of the image right at the mouth of the Caloosahatchee River.Florida residents say that pitch black water has been washing up on the shore and ...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Tropical Storm Edouard - Image by Jesse Allen, based on data from the at NASA-GSFC
Tropical Storm Edouard is the fifth named Atlantic storm of this year?s hurricane season, but so far has done little more than bring some occasionally heavy rains to the Southeast, which had already been experiencing rain and flash flooding for almost a week. In this true-color Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) image from September 1, 2002, Edouard can be seen over the Atlantic, making its way slowly towards Florida...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Tropical Storm Edouard - Image courtesy Jacques Descloitres, at NASA GSFC.
Tropical Storm Edouard made landfall in central Florida late in the day on September 4, 2002. Soon after the storm weakened to a tropical depression with winds of only 25 miles per hour. The event can be seen in this true-color image taken on September 4, 2002, by the (MODIS), flying aboard NASA?s spacecraft. The storm is expected to dump 2 to 4 more inches of rain on the region. Sensor: ADEOS/ADEOS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Impassable One Fire Burns in Florida - Image courtesy Jacques Descloitres, at NASA GSFC
The (MODIS) captured this image of the Impassable One fire as swept through 38,000 acres of timber and swamp land in the Osceola National Forest in northeast Florida. The fire began as a prescribed burn on March 2, but slipped out of control, growing under windy conditions on March 6 and 7. On March 9, about 30 families in Taylor, Florida were forced to evacuate briefly before rains staunched the fire’s progress...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 4
[image]Hurricane Frances - NASA image courtesy Jacques Descloitres, NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center
At noon (EDT) on Saturday, September 4, the eye of Hurricane Frances sat just off the coast of eastern Florida when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on NASA’s satellite captured this image. Thunderstorms to the northwest of the eye were already ashore, beginning the deluge of the state that lasted throughout the weekend.The high-resolution image provided above is 500 meters per pixel...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Turbidity along the coast of Florida - Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
The shallow coastal waters to the west of Florida are very turbid (sediment-filled) in this true-color (MODIS) image from November 18, 2002, perhaps from a storm that passed through in previous days. At the southern tip of Florida, the Everglades are deep green and brown, and contrast sharply with the cement-colored strip along the eastern shore which is the West Palm Beach-Fort Lauderdale-Miami urban corridor...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 6
[image]Hurricane Charley (03L) off Florida - Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
The (MODIS) aboard NASA’s satellite captured this true-color image of Hurricane Charley on August 13, 2004, at 12:35 p.m. Eastern Daylight Savings Time. At the time this image was taken, Charley was rapidly gaining strength and would reach Category Four status just 90 minutes later. Maximum sustained winds at 2:00 p.m. were at 145 miles per hour, and Charley was moving towards the north-northeast at 20 miles per hour...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 4
[image]Hurricane Frances (06L) off the Antilles - Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer () aboard NASA’s satellite captured this true-color image of Hurricane Frances on September 1, 2004, at 15:30 UTC (11:30 AM EDT). At the time this image was taken Frances was located approximately 1180 kilometers (735 miles) east-southeast of the southeast coast of Florida. Maximum sustained winds were near 220 km/hr (140 mph) and the storm was moving towards the west-northwest at 26 km/hr (16 mph)...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Tropical Storm (16L) off Florida - Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
Tropical Storm Ophelia gathered strength and size off the Atlantic Coast of Florida for several days. During this time, it brought winds and rain over a growing area including the Florida coast, though the storm’s center remained offshore. By September 8, 2005, it briefly reached hurricane strength, though this status lasted only a few hours before the storm weakened.It is unusual for a storm system to build just offshore in this fashion, especially as having rain bands over land tends to brea...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Hurricane Wilma (24L) departing Florida - Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
Hurricane Wilma had just crossed Florida when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer () flying on NASA’s satellite captured this image on October 24, 2005, at 2:25 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. The storm made landfall eight hours earlier, at about 6:30 a.m., near Naples, Florida. At the time, Wilma was a strong Category 3 storm with winds gusting to 200 kilometers per hour (125 miles per hour)...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Hurricane Wilma approaching Florida - Jeff Schmaltz
Hurricane Wilma was still approaching Florida when this image was acquired on Sunday, October 23, 2005. By early Monday, October 24, 2005, the storm had made landfall. When it struck, it was a storm, with maximum sustained winds of over 96 knots or 111 miles per hour (1 knot = 1.15 mph). By 9 a.m. local (Eastern Daylight Time), it had weakened to a Category 2 storm (64-82 knots or 74-95 mph). At that time, it was moving at a speed of 40 kilometers (25 miles per hour) and was expected to move off...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 4
[image]Aeroelastic Fixed Wing Micro Air Vehicle - NASA/Langley Research Center (NASA-LaRC)
Wind tunnel testing of the University of Florida Aeroelastic Fixed Wing Micro Air Vehicle, biologically inspired flight systems. Photographed in building 1214, Basic Aerodynamics Research Tunnel (BART).
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 6
[image]Windshear Deployment Orlando - NASA/Langley Research Center
91-7066 Group photograph of the Windshear Deployment team at Orlando Florida -- TSRV B-737, Transport Systems Research Vehicle
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Windshear Deployment Orlando - NASA/Langley Research Center
91-7066 Group photograph of the Windshear Deployment team at Orlando Florida -- TSRV B-737, Transport Systems Research Vehicle
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]ASCANs Helms and Gregory swim in pool during Elgin AFB survival training - NASA/Johnson Space Center (NASA-JSC)
1990 Group 13 Astronaut Candidates (ASCANs) Susan J. Helms (foreground) and William G. Gregory, wearing helmets and flight suits, swim in pool at Elgin Air Force Base (AFB) in Pensacola, Florida, during water survival exercises. The training familiarized the candidates with survival techniques necessary in the event of a water landing. ASCANs participated in the exercises from 08-14-90 through 08-17-90.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 5
[image]NASA LEWIS RESEARCH CENTER PERSONNEL AT CAPE KENNEDY FLORIDA - NASA/Glenn Research Center
NASA LEWIS RESEARCH CENTER PERSONNEL AT CAPE KENNEDY FLORIDA
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 7
[image]ASCAN Precourt floats on life raft during Elgin AFB water survival training - NASA/Johnson Space Center (NASA-JSC)
1990 Group 13 Astronaut Candidate (ASCAN) Charles J. Precourt, wearing helmet and flight suit, floats in pool using an underarm flotation device and a single person life raft at Elgin Air Force Base (AFB) in Pensacola, Florida, during water survival exercises. The training familiarized the candidates with survival techniques necessary in the event of a water landing. ASCANs participated in the exercises from 08-14-90 through 08-17-90.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 7
[image]Hurricane Ophelia - NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, at NASA GSFC
Tropical Storm Ophelia gathered strength and size off the Atlantic Coast of Florida for several days. During this time, it brought winds and rain over a growing area including the Florida coast, though the storm’s center remained offshore. By September 8, it briefly reached hurricane strength, though this status lasted only a few hours before the storm lost some intensity and was again classified as a tropical storm...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Hurricane Ophelia - NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, at NASA GSFC
Ophelia was once again a hurricane when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer () on NASA’s satellite captured this image at 11:35 a.m. local time, on September 11, 2005. A Category 1 hurricane, Ophelia had sustained winds of 110 kilometers per hour (70 miles per hour).Tropical Storm Ophelia formed off the Atlantic Coast of Florida. As it gathered strength and size, it brought winds and rain to parts of the Florida coast, though the storm’s center remained offshore...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Hurricane Wilma - NASA image acquired by direct broadcast and processed by Liam Gumley at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
Hurricane Wilma had just crossed Florida when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer () flying on NASA’s satellite captured this image on October 24, 2005, at 2:25 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. The storm made landfall eight hours earlier, at about 6:30 a.m., near Naples, Florida. At the time, Wilma was a strong Category 3 storm with winds gusting to 200 kilometers per hour (125 miles per hour)...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 6
[image]Fires in Florida - NASA image courtesy the Goddard Space Flight Center
Multiple wildfires have been burning in Florida throughout early May 2006. This image of the area around Lake Okeechobee in central Florida was captured on May 14 by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on NASA’s satellite. Locations of actively burning fires that MODIS detected are outlined in red. South of the lake, the Berg Fire had burned nearly 30,000 acres as of May 17, according to the National Interagency Fire Center...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Tropical Storm Alberto - NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data obtained courtesy of the team.
Tropical Storm Alberto formed as a tropical depression early in the morning on June 10, 2006, in the Yucatan Channel. Alberto gradually gathered strength as it took a slow track northward into the Gulf. By early morning on June 11, wind strength within the storm crossed the critical threshold of 39 knots (70 kilometers per hour; 45 miles per hour). Thus Alberto became the first named storm of the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]SeaWiFS: Hurricane Michelle Aftereffects - Provided by the SeaWiFS Project, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
This before and after pair of SeaWiFS images illustrates how a hurricane can stir bottom sediments into the water column. The first image was collected on October 24, 2001, and the second image was collected November 5, 2001 just after Hurricane Michelle had passed through the area. The center of the hurricane is still visible in the upper left corner of the November 5 image.The most noticeable change is in the Gulf of Batabano between the western end of Guba and the Isle of Youth...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
This image of black water off the coast of Florida was acquired on January 9, 2002, by the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS). Scientists and local fishermen are not sure what is coloring this typically turquoise water black. Amid growing concern, scientists are now trying to determine the source of the black water. Sensor: OrbView-2/SeaWiFS. Data Start Date: 1/9/02.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, and ORBIMAGE
This image of black water off the coast of Florida was acquired on February 18, 2002, by the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS). Scientists and local fishermen are not sure what is coloring this typically turquoise water black. Amid growing concern, scientists are now trying to determine the source of the black water.For up-to-date images of the area, view these SeaWiFS Images of Sensor: OrbView-2/SeaWiFS...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image by Jesse Allen, Robert Simmon, and the
This image from the Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) shows black water off the coast of Florida on January 30, 2002. In late March 2002 a diver investigating the water discovered dead and dying sponges and coral—an indication that the discoloration may be the result of a toxic phytoplankton bloom, which sometimes kill sponges before other marine species. Sensor: Terra/MODIS. Data Start Date: 1/30/02.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image by Jesse Allen, Robert Simmon, and the
By March 10, the mysterious black water off the west coast of Florida had started to disperse and drift toward the Florida Keys. Although no one yet knows what caused the discoloration, divers in the area have found dead sponges and coral, which is indicative of an algae bloom. Sensor: Terra/MODIS. Data Start Date: 3/10/02.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 5
[image]Tropical Storm Cristobal - This visualization was producted by the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
The above image is from an (4.1 MB MPEG) that displays the rainfall rates within the Tropical Storm Cristobal on August 7, 2002, as it passed just to the east of St. Augustine, Florida. Yellow represents 0.5 to 1 inches of rain, green represents 1 to 2 inches of rain, and red represents rainfall levels of 2 inches and up. The rainfall data were obtained by the Precipitation Radar aboard NASA's satellite...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Black Water off the Gulf Coast of Florida - Image courtesy Liam Gumley, , University of Wisconsin-Madison
Over the past few weeks, another mass of black water appears to have formed off the Gulf Coast of Florida near Sanibel Island. This false-color image acquired on August 14, 2002, by the (MODIS) aboard NASA's spacecraft shows the location of the black water. In the image, Sanibel is the hook-shaped Island on the western coast of Florida at the midway point of the image right at the mouth of the Caloosahatchee River.Florida residents say that pitch black water has been washing up on the shore and ...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Tropical Storm Edouard - Image by Jesse Allen, based on data from the at NASA-GSFC
Tropical Storm Edouard is the fifth named Atlantic storm of this year's hurricane season, but so far has done little more than bring some occasionally heavy rains to the Southeast, which had already been experiencing rain and flash flooding for almost a week. In this true-color Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) image from September 1, 2002, Edouard can be seen over the Atlantic, making its way slowly towards Florida...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Tropical Storm Edouard off Florida - Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
This (MODIS) image shows tropical Storm Edouard in its final stages, as it approached the Florida coast on September 4, 2002. Sensor: Terra/MODIS. Data Start Date: 9/4/02. Data End Date: 9/4/02.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]Tropical Storm Edouard - Image courtesy Jacques Descloitres, at NASA GSFC.
Tropical Storm Edouard made landfall in central Florida late in the day on September 4, 2002. Soon after the storm weakened to a tropical depression with winds of only 25 miles per hour. The event can be seen in this true-color image taken on September 4, 2002, by the (MODIS), flying aboard NASA's spacecraft. The storm is expected to dump 2 to 4 more inches of rain on the region. Sensor: Terra/MODIS.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 2
[image]Dr. von Braun with Gen. Ostrander, Dr. Rees, and Gen. Barclay - NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center
In this 1959 photo, taken at Cape Canaveral, Florida, Dr. von Braun (2nd from left) Director of the U.S. Army Ballistic Missile Agency's (ABMA) Development Operations Division, is shown conferring with Air Force Major General Donald R. Ostrander (left), on assignment at NASA as launch vehicle director; Dr. Eberhard Rees, deputy to Dr. von Braun, and Army Brigadier General John Barclay, commander of the ABMA.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 3
[image]LDEF: On RMS Arm With Florida in Background - NASA/Langley Research Center (NASA-LaRC)
LDEF: On RMS Arm With Florida in Background
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 5
[image]Aerial oblique artist concept of the Merritt Island Launch Complex - NASA/Johnson Space Center (NASA-JSC)
Aerial oblique artist concept of the Merritt Island Launch Complex, Merritt Island, Florida.
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 8
[image]U.S. Rep. Bill Nelson of Florida during medical tests at JSC's Clinic - NASA/Johnson Space Center (NASA-JSC)
U.S. Rep. Bill Nelson of Florida during medical tests at JSC's Clinic. Photos include Rep. Nelson talking to Sharon Briceno (center) and Betty Lord before the tests begin. The congressman's torso bears a number of sensors for the testing (40835); Portrait view of Rep. Nelson with sensors attached to his chest (40836); Rep. Nelson gets some assistance from nurses at the clinic as he prepares to participate in medical tests...
Keywords: Where -- Florida
Downloads: 4
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